Saturday 7 September 2024

Let's Brew - 1934 Cairnes Double Stout

Yet another Cairnes recipe today. Well, I need to somehow justify all the time I've been spending going  through their brewing records.

Unlike Single Stout, which had seen its gravity whittles away over the years, Double Stout was the same strength as in 1923. Remaining at the same strength as Guinness Extra Stout.

Though there have been some changes to the recipe. Namely, the addition of flaked maize and a type of sugar. Not exactly sure what type of sugar it was, as it’s only described as “Saccharum”. It’s probably a kind of invert. Though I can’t be sure. I’ve guessed No. 2 invert.

The base malt was mostly made from Irish barley. Though 10% was made from Californian barley.

The hops are very different from in 1923., when they were all English. Here, they’re a split between Oregon and Styrian. The hopping rate is about the same at around 8 lbs per quarter (336 lbs) of malt.  However, as the types of hops were higher in alpha acid, the calculated bitterness level is quite a bit higher 53 IBU.
 

1934 Cairnes Double Stout
pale malt 10.00 lb 80.65%
roast barley 1.00 lb 8.06%
flaked maize 0.50 lb 4.03%
No. 2 invert sugar 0.75 lb 6.05%
caramel 2000 SRM 0.15 lb 1.21%
Cluster 120 mins 1.25 oz
Cluster 60 mins 0.50 oz
Styrian Goldings 60 mins 0.50 oz
Styrian Goldings 30 mins 1.00 oz
OG 1055
FG 1014
ABV 5.42
Apparent attenuation 74.55%
IBU 53
SRM 34
Mash at 150º F
Sparge at 170º F
Boil time 120 minutes
pitching temp 60.5º F
Yeast Wyeast 1084 Irish ale

 

Friday 6 September 2024

Beer Guide to the 1970s

I've decided to take the plunge and add a guide to all the breweries and beers of the 1970s to my book "Keg!". I'm still not convinced how many people will find this interesting, but what the hell. I'm going to run with it.

This is a small excerpt from the "B" section. 

 

Boddington
Manchester,
Greater Manchester.
Founded:    1778
Closed:        2005
Tied houses:    280

The largest of Manchester’s independent breweries, Boddington managed to fight off a takeover attempt by Allied breweries. The tied estate was spread across Lancashire and Cheshire and into a corner of Derbyshire. Their distinctively pale Bitter had somewhat of a cult following. Bought by Whitbread in 1989, for a while their Bitter was heavily promoted in “smooth” form.

beer style format OG description
Bitter Pale Ale draught 1035 well hopped
Mild Mild draught 1031 Dark Mild medium sweet
Best Mild Mild draught 1033 medium dark
Strong Ale Strong Ale draught 1060 mellow and smooth
Light Ale Pale Ale bottled   approaching a Lager in character
Strong Ale Strong Ale bottled 1060  
Nut Brown Ale Brown Ale bottled   Sweet
Extra Stout Stout bottled   Sweet Stout



Border
Wrexham,
Clwyd.
Founded:    
Closed:        1984
Tied houses:    170

Border was the largest independent brewery in North Wales.  They were notable for their large range of Mild Ales. Their pubs were mostly either side of the North Wales border with England. Though they did extend as far north as Chester and east to Staffordshire. They were bought by Marston in 1984.

beer style format OG description
Bitter Pale Ale draught 1034.3 hoppy
Light Mild Mild  draught   more like a Bitter
Dark Mild Mild  draught 1031.6 medium-strength
Exhibition Mild Mild draught 1032.2 stronger
Pale Ale Pale Ale bottled    
Exhibition Pale Ale bottled   a stronger Pale Ale
Royal Wrexham Ale Barley Wine bottled    
Brown Ale Brown Ale bottled    
Strong Brown Ale Brown Ale bottled    

 

Brain
Cardiff,
Wales.
Founded:    1713
Closed:        still open
Tied houses:    100

A decent-sized independent brewery in South Wales. Their tied estate was located in South Wales, stretching as far west as Swansea.

beer style format OG description
Bitter Pale Ale draught 1035.3 well balanced
SA Pale Ale draught 1040.6 full bodied and malty
Red Dragon Draught Dark Mild draught 1035 Dark Mild
Tudor Light Pale Ale keg    
Gold Dragon Pale Ale keg   stronger
Pale Ale Pale Ale bottled    
IPA IPA bottled   stronger
Amber Ale Pale Ale bottled   strongest
Extra Stout Stout bottled 1043 medium sweet
Srtong Ale Strong Ale bottled    


Thursday 5 September 2024

Analysing Cairnes brewing records

The Cairnes records are ones where I'm glad that I have a long set. Both in terms of records spanning a long period and lots of photos for each year.

An unusual feature of the records is that there are pre-printed headers for specific ingredients. Which was probably really handy when the records were first used. Only problem is, that they had multiple books printed up and, due to the horizontal format, each book lasted for many years. Sometimes more than ten years. And, inevitably, the ingredients used changed over time. Making some of the header irrelevant. With the columns used for different ingredients.

Now, sometimes, the printed header was crossed out and the correct ingredient pencilled in. But only occasionally. Which is why it's handy to have lots of photos. Worst is the column headed "Pat. Malt". It's still there on the forms in the 1940s: several decades after they switched to roast barley.

There's only really one way to tell which ingredients were being used. That's by looking at the monthly totals. Which indicate how much of each ingredient was used in the previous month and the year to date. That's the way I know Cairnes were definitely using roast barley and not patent malt.

Also pre-printed are the headings for the type of beer. Which also ended up being incorrect through time. And where, again, they would sometimes (but not always) cross out a beer type and scribble in another.

"X" crossed out and "2d" pencilled in.

It's so much fun.

Wednesday 4 September 2024

Let's Brew Wednesday - 1914 Cairnes Single Stout

By far Cairnes most popular beer was Single Stout. Accounting for at least 50% of what they brewed.

With a gravity of just 1050º, it’s really more like a Porter than a Stout. At least by the standards of the day. For example, in 1914 Whitbread Porter had an OG of 1052º, slightly higher than this “Stout”.

The grist is pretty simple. There’s just the one malt and two adjuncts. The amount of roast barley is quite limited at just 6.5% of the total. Which leaves the colour relatively pale. Only around the shade of Dark Mild.

Two types of suage were used. Glucose acting as a malt substitute. And caramel for colour. Without which this would be far too pale for the style.

Two thirds of the hops were Oregon from the 1912 harvest. The remainder were Belgian, simply described as “old”. Presumably used as they were cheap, costing just 83 shillings per hundredweight, While the Oregons cost 135 shillings. 

1914 Cairnes Single Stout
pale malt 8.00 lb 74.21%
roast barley 0.75 lb 6.96%
flaked maize 1.00 lb 9.28%
glucose 1.00 lb 9.28%
caramel 2000 SRM 0.03 lb 0.28%
Cluster 120 mins 1.00 oz
Cluster 60 mins 1.00 oz
Strisselspalt 30 mins 1.00 oz
OG 1050
FG 1014
ABV 4.76
Apparent attenuation 72.00%
IBU 49
SRM 20
Mash at 154º F
Sparge at 170º F
Boil time 120 minutes
pitching temp 58º F
Yeast Wyeast 1084 Irish ale


Tuesday 3 September 2024

Beers I miss (part three a) Younger's No. 3

I should really have done this beer as part three, shouldn't I? Missed a trick there.

My relationship with No. 3 goes back a long way. To even before I could llegally drink. Which is more than 50 years ago.

Back in the early 1970s, a recipe for a clone of No. 3, which at the time was unavailable. Me and my brother brewed it up and it turned out pretty well. For an extract beerm, that is. Which is a sign that we made it very early in our homebrewing career, before we switched to all malt.

No. 3 was a bit of an oddity. A Scotch Ale which was much weaker than most examples of the style. And was quite often sold on draught, unlike the stronger versions. Let's take a look into its history a little.

In the first half of the 19th century, William Younger brewed an array of Strong Scotch Ales. Which, as was Scottish tradition, were given shilling designations. This referred to the wholesale price of the beer per hogshead. Their gravities ranged from 1076 for 60 Shilling to 1141 for 140 Shilling.

For some inexplicable reason, Younger introduced a new range of Strong Ales, numbers from No. 1 to No. 4, ranging in gravity from 1077 to 1099. Perhaps they were trying to emulate the Strong Ales of some Burton brewers, such as Bass. Oddly, they continued to brew a rnage to strong Shilling Ales. Over the years, the range of numbered Ales was whittled down, until only No. 1 and No. 3 remained.

Scottish & Newcastle revived No. 3. at the end of the 1970s. Which is how I came to encounter in the wild. In the early 1980s, I was living on Burley Road in Leeds. Me and some of my mates became members of the Burley Road Liberal Club, Basically, just so we could play snooker. The club was tied to Scottish & Newcastle and had a couple of their bbeers on handpump: Younger's IPA and No. 3.

Being a Mild drinker, I naturally plumped for the No. 3. Which was sort of like a strong Mild. Dark and not too hoppy. A rathher pleasant drink to go with a few frames of snooker.

A couple of years later, when I was working in the centre of London, me and my colleagues used to hang out at an S & N pub around the corner from the office. Usually, at least twice at lunchtime and twice after work each work. Just like Burley Road Liberal Club, it had Younger's IPA and No. 3 on cask. I'm sure you can guess which I usually drank. And which worked wonders for my darts game.

When did I last drink Younger's No. 3? It's a long time. It could possiblly be as long ago as when I last worked in London. Which was October 1985. I might have had the odd pint after that. But they haven't registered in my memory.

Of course, S & N discontinued No. 3 again. I'm not sure exactly when. I think in the 1990s. Looking back on it - and having seen earlier brewing records - I suspect that No. 3 was IPA with caramel added. At least in its final incarnation.
 

Monday 2 September 2024

What I missed

the first time I went through the Cairnes records. Was something very important, in terms of a peculiarity of Irish brewing.

It's not unusual for me to either miss or misinterpret things in brewing records. Hopefully, I spot my mistake not too far in. Because then I need to go back and fix all the table entries that I've already transcribed. Not the most fun work. Not that transcribing brewing records is ever something I would describe as fun.

On the face of it, it appears that every batch of Single Stout had a small quantity of what looks like Double Stout parti-gyled with it. And I mean a small amount. For example, there might be 194 barrels of Single Stout and just 14 barrels of "Double Stout".

But what's odd, is that there isn't a full fermentation record for the "Double Stout". Just one or two entrie. While there is a full record for Single Stout, right up to racking. Why would that be?

Eventually I twigged. There's a reason there isn't a full fermentation record. Because that wort wasn't fully fermented. At least not on its own. I'm pretty sure that this is "heading". One of the elements of Irish Stout. It's a strong wort in a high degree of fermentation which was blended in at racking or packaging time. It's effectively a sort of Kräusen.

Based on the amount of Single Stout and heading brewed, about 7% was added. Which would have increased the effective OG a little, as well as providing condition. It's the equivalent of the primings added in England, except it was in the form of wort rather than a sugar solution.

This is the relevant section of a brewing record. Where the Single Stout, with an OG of 1039 in the first row and the heading, with an OG of 1050, is the second.

Looking at it now, I've noticed something else. There's a gap below where it says "Shift to 6". It looks to me as if they're using the dropping system and the "shift" is when they drop from the round to the sttling square.

Sunday 1 September 2024

Cairnes Single Stout hops

Over to the hops. At the start of the period, Cairnes used exclusively foreign hops in their Single Stout. Either from Oregon or Belgium. That all changed in the middle of the year.

When English hops appear. There were still Oregon hops, but they were getting older as they all remained from the 1915 harvest. The reason is obvious: imports of American hops dried up. Once the war was over, large quantities of fresher American hops came into the mix. Though there were still some English hops used.

Let’s see how Fullers use of hops compared.

There’s a similar pattern to at Cairnes, where new foreign hops disappear in 1916. Though, in this case, rather than American hops they were Belgian and Germany. After that, it’s all English hops until after war’s end. When lots of French and American hops appear.

“MK”, obviously, stands for Mid-Kent. Not really sure what “B” means. I can’t think of a type of hops that starts with the letter “B”, other than Belgian.

Cairnes Single Stout hops 1914 - 1923
Date Year hop 1 hop 2 hop 3 hop 4
1st Jan 1914 Oregon 1912 Belgium old    
1st Sep 1914 Oregon 1913 Oregon no date Oregon 1912  
7th Jan 1915 Oregon 1913 Oregon 1913 Oregon 1907  
2nd Oct 1916 Oregon 1915 English 1915 Poperinge 1915  
3rd May 1917 Oregon 1915 English 1916    
7th Jun 1917 Oregon 1915 English 1916    
1st Nov 1917 Oregon 1915 English 1916    
3rd Jan 1918 Oregon 1915 English 1916    
2nd May 1918 Oregon 1915 English 1916    
3rd Oct 1918 Oregon 1915 English 1916 English 1917  
3rd Feb 1919 Oregon 1915 English 1917    
2nd Oct 1919 English 1917 English 1918 Pacifics no date  
1st Jan 1920 Oregon 1918 English 1917 English 1918 old Pacifics
15th Apr 1920 Oregon 1918 English 1918    
4th Oct 1920 Oregon 1918 Oregon 1919 English 1919  
3rd Oct 1921 Oregon 1918 Oregon 1919 English 1919 English 1920
2nd Feb 1922 Sonoma 1920 English 1917 English 1920  
1st Jan 1923 English 1921 English 1921 English 1921  
Sources:
Cairnes brewing records held at the Guinness archives, document numbers GDB/SUB/0022 and GDB/BR17/1257.

 

Fullers Porter hops 1914 - 1925
Date Year hop 1 hop 2 hop 3 hop 4 hop 5
18th Nov 1914 MK 1913 Poperinge 1913 Hallertau 1912 Farnham 1913 Tolhurst 1914
17th Feb 1915 Poperinge 1913 B 1913 MK 1913 Tolhurst 1913  
2nd Jun 1916 Tolhurst 1915 MK 1914 Farnham 1914    
4th Aug 1916 Tolhurst 1915 MK 1914 B 1914 old hops  
12th Apr 1917 MK 1915 B 1915      
9th Aug 1917 No. 2 B 1915 Tolhurst 1916 MK 1916    
5th Jan 1918 MK 1916 Tolhuirst 1916      
19th Apr 1918 Farnham 1916 MK 1916      
14th Jan 1919 MK 1917 Poperinge 1914      
10th Feb 1920 Alsace 1917 Alsace 1919 Sonoma 1916 Oregon  
16th Jun 1925 Pacifics 1922 English 1923 English 1924    
Source:
Fullers brewing records held at the brewery.

 

Saturday 31 August 2024

Let's Brew - 1970 Watneys Red Barrel

A couple of days ago someone asked me if I'd ever published a recipe of Watneys Red Barrel. I knew I'd written one and assumed that I'd posted it at some point. It turns out that I hadn't. So here you go.

I couldn’t miss this iconic beer. Even if it’s iconic for all the wrong reasons. Gaining a reputation as the classic terrible beer. But was it intrinsically awful?

The recipe doesn’t look much different to other Bitters of the day. It’s over 90% malt, which most of its rivals weren’t. And it’s only malt and sugar. There are no adjuncts. There was a little Dixon’s enzymic malt, which I’ve replaced with more base malt.

The hopping looks fine, too: Fuggles for bittering and Goldings for aroma. And enough to leave a decent degree of bitterness. Dry-hopped, too. Though that was with some form of hop concentrate.

Overall, it looks like a pretty decent beer. That’s before it was pasteurised. Derek Prentice told me that the Truman’s beers of this period always tasted stale because of the heavy pasteurisation. Perhaps that was also the case with Red Barrel. 

1970 Watneys Red Barrel
pale malt 7.50 lb 87.41%
crystal malt 60 L 0.33 lb 3.85%
No. 3 invert sugar 0.50 lb 5.83%
malt extract 0.25 lb 2.91%
Fuggles 105 min 1.75 oz
Goldings 15 min 0.75 oz
Goldings dry hops 0.125 oz
OG 1039.2
FG 1006
ABV 4.39
Apparent attenuation 84.69%
IBU 32
SRM 8
Mash at 158º F
Sparge at 175º F
Boil time 75 minutes
pitching temp 60º F
Yeast WLP023 Burton Ale


Friday 30 August 2024

Beers I miss (part three): Braník 12° Dark

I was lucky enough to visit Prague several times in the 1980s. When Czechoslovakia had the highest general beer quality of anywhere in the world. I looked hard, but was unable to find any bad beer. Though a couple of beers really stood out, both of them dark. U Fleku 14° and Braník 12° Dark.

As a hardened Mild drinker, Czechoslovakia's dark beers naturally drew my attention. Though they could be difficult to track down. Most pubs only sold a single type of beer. And that was usually a pale Lager. Either 10° or 12°. Only the occasional pub plumped for a dark option. They did exist, though. And I managed to hunt some of them down.

There was a small one-room place on one of the narrow lanes leading to Charles bridge. An unassuming pub, unlike the larger beer halls. And it was there that I got my first taste of the the wonderful Braník 12° Dark. Unike some of Czechoslovakia's dark Lagers it wasn't particularly sweet. Though it was packed with malt flavours, topped off with a reasonable level of hop bitterness. And very drinkable, as all good Czech beers are. It reminded me of a really good Dark Mild. Though somewhat stronger.

"Pijte Branícke Pivo!" is the title of a Hasek (the author of "The Good Soldier Svejk") story. The title comes from a slogan attached to brewery, meaning "Drink Branik beer!" The story itself is about a travelling down the Vltava by boat. Where they go past the brewery. For me, it was just another reason to drink Branik beer.

Prague's breweries were privatised in a particularly stupid way. In the communist period, breweries were grouped together on a regional basis. All the breweries in Prague were in one such group. Which was sold off as one entity. Weirdly, ending up in the hands of Bass Charrington. Who would want to own multiple breweries in one city? Inevitably, all but Staropramen, the largets, were closed.

Braník closed in 2006. Which was pretty annoying. Even more annoying when I recently discovered that the plant had been completely modernised just a little earlier.

How I would love to return to the mid-1980s and drink a delicious Braník 12° Dark served by air pressure in a pub with stinky toilets.

Thursday 29 August 2024

Cairnes Single Stout sugars 1914 - 1923

Moving on to the sugars, this is where Fullers and Cairnes really diverge. At the start of the war, Cairnes Single Stout had a little under 9% sugar, in the form of glucose. In 1916, that disappears in 1916, and for the rest of the war there’s no sugar at all. Sugar does reappear in 1920, but only in the form of caramel.

Things at Fullers were way, way more complicated. Over the war years, they employed seven different types of sugar. Though in any single brew there were never more than three.

The most popular sugars were glucose and something called Special Dark. I’m guessing that the latter was some sort of dark invert sugar. The quantity used was pretty high at the start and the end of the period covered by the table. I assume restrictions on the supply of sugar was responsible for the drastic reduction in the quantity during the war years.

At Fullers, the proportion of sugar in the grist was far higher than at Cairnes. Starting at over 25%. Even in the most difficult later war years, the amount never fell lower than 6.5%. And for most of the time was well over 10%.

Fullers also used way more caramel, varying between 3% and 7.5%. While at Cairnes it went from zero to a maximum of 2%.

While at Cairnes, even at the start of the war, sugar was less than 10% of the grist. From 1916 on, that was reduced to zero. And, other than caramel, no sugar was used after WW I. 

Cairnes Single Stout grists 1914 - 1923
Date Year pale malt roast barley flaked maize glucose caramel
1st Jan 1914 74.45% 6.50% 9.93% 8.82% 0.30%
1st Sep 1914 70.03% 7.74% 13.34% 8.89%  
7th Jan 1915 71.37% 7.22% 12.69% 8.72%  
2nd Oct 1916 79.62% 7.11% 13.27%    
3rd May 1917 79.62% 7.11% 13.27%    
7th Jun 1917 87.83% 6.84% 5.32%    
1st Nov 1917 87.83% 6.84% 5.32%    
3rd Jan 1918 86.70% 6.88% 6.42%    
2nd May 1918 91.17% 6.74% 2.10%    
3rd Oct 1918 93.33% 6.67%      
3rd Feb 1919 93.33% 6.67%      
2nd Oct 1919 85.42% 7.46% 7.12%    
1st Jan 1920 89.05% 7.66% 3.30%    
15th Apr 1920 87.33% 7.37% 5.29%    
4th Oct 1920 81.76% 8.54% 9.28%   0.41%
3rd Oct 1921 95.33% 3.91%     0.76%
2nd Feb 1922 76.04% 10.18% 12.64%   1.13%
1st Jan 1923 89.36% 8.51%     2.13%
Sources:
Cairnes brewing records held at the Guinness archives, document numbers GDB/SUB/0022 and GDB/BR17/1257.

Fullers Porter sugars 1914 - 1925
Date Year glucose invert Special Dark cane sugar Dark Trivert Porteris caramel total sugar
18th Nov 1914 11.34%   12.60%       3.30% 27.25%
17th Feb 1915 3.83%       9.56%   2.91% 16.30%
2nd Jun 1916           15.84% 6.15% 21.99%
4th Aug 1916     4.90%       3.85% 8.75%
12th Apr 1917 3.44%   6.89%       3.59% 13.92%
9th Aug 1917     1.25% 1.25%     3.92% 6.42%
5th Jan 1918     2.35% 2.35%     3.69% 8.39%
19th Apr 1918 8.59%   4.30% 8.59%     4.42% 25.90%
14th Jan 1919 5.69% 5.69%         7.57% 18.94%
10th Feb 1920       6.92%     4.89% 11.81%
16th Jun 1925     13.50%       4.80% 18.31%
Source:
Fullers brewing records held at the brewery.